When Is Calibration Important?
When Is Calibration Important?
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Keywords: calibration, remote testing, automatic manufacturing tolerances, trim, digital pot, potentiometer, DAC, voltage reference, reduce test time, Monte Carlo analysis, sensor, value, actuator TUTORIAL 5066
Introduction
Another term for superior calibration is first-rate workmanship. There was a time when guilds were formed to propagate quality workmanship. An apprentice would work for years to build a physical skill. A master craftsman might dedicate his entire life to expertly carving wood or stone, forging iron, or sculpting pottery to make beautiful buildings, artwork, or monuments. Today, some argue we are more practical, but commonplace consumer devices are beautifully mindblowing pieces of utilitarian art. Humankind has gone from a room-filling vacuum tube computer, to a transistor, to a laptop, to smartphones, tablets, and e-readers in about 60 years. We have become jaded instead of being constantly amazed; we just accept these wonders as everyday occurrences. We insist on quality products, which require accurate manufacturing equipment. At the same time, equipment must be affordable. How can manufacturers deliver "perfect" equipment at a reasonable price? In a word, calibration. Electronic calibration enables the remote calibration and testing of field devices such as sensors, valves, and actuators in factories. It also enables the creation of many low-cost consumer devices. All practical components, both mechanical and electronic, have manufacturing tolerances. The more relaxed the tolerance, the more affordable the component. But when components are assembled into a system, the individual tolerances sum to create a total system-error tolerance. Through the proper design of trim, adjustment, and calibration circuits, it is possible to correct these system errors, making equipment safe, accurate, and affordable. Calibration is a comparison of the equipment's performance to a standard of known accuracy, and then a correction (adjustment) to minimize any errors. It allows affordable tolerance components to produce
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products that surpass normal expectations. The benefits of calibration are many and can reduce cost in several areas. Calibration can be used to remove manufacturing tolerances, specify less-expensive components, increase reliability and customer satisfaction, reduce test time and customer returns, and speed product delivery.
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miles of shoreline is measured in millions or billions of gallons. In these types of measurements, an ounce is insignificant. Electronic measurements are also application specificand laboratory instruments have very different tolerance requirements. One way to build an electronic-measuring instrument for a laboratory is to use extremely close tolerance parts for every component. This extra expense might be warranted in some applications. However, another approach can result in the required accuracy at a lower cost. This second method, employing calibration, can achieve a more accurate instrument. The instrument is manufactured with components with an affordable tolerance level. Those tolerances are calibrated out of the measurement by adjusting the instrument while comparing the instrument with a reliable standard. A simple illustration is a circuit made up of four amplifiers (Figure 1). The gain is set by the tolerances of eight resistors. If the overall circuit is required to be within 1%, we could use 0.1% resistors (method one) or we could use calibration. We could decide to replace one resistor with an adjustable resistor or potentiometer (pot). Then, the other seven resistors could be 5% resistors (35% total) or 1% resistors (7% total). An analysis of the circuit is necessary to decide what tolerance is practical. Other parameters will also be considered, such as power consumption, the granularity of adjustment, and temperature stability.
Figure 1. A system with four amplifiers between other circuit functional blocks. The next consideration is the stability of the adjustmentwill one adjustment at the factory meet the requirement, or will periodic adjustment be necessary? Again, this is application specific. An extraordinary tool, the Micro-Cap 10 Circuit simulator from Spectrum Software, compares stability and the change in a waveform versus the tolerance of components. A free evaluation version can be found at www.maximintegrated.com/cal. The software allows resistor values to be swept and Monte Carlo analysis to be performed to explore the effects of component tolerances.
Accurate automated adjustments with calibration digital-to-analog converters (CDACs) and calibration digital potentiometers (CDPots) make trimming away component tolerances easy. CDACs and CDPots share some unique attributes that enable automated calibrationupon power-on, they start in a known condition. That can be full-scale, midscale, low-scale, or a previously set level from self-contained nonvolatile memory. Figure 2 compares a DAC with a CDAC and CDPot. Ordinary DACs allow a single reference voltage (VREF) to be applied; this reference voltage usually becomes the highest DAC setting. The lowest DAC setting is a fixed voltage, typically ground. The CDAC and CDPot allow both the top and bottom DAC voltage to be set to arbitrary voltages, thus removing excess adjustment range. Removing the unused adjustment range eliminates any possibility that the circuit could be grossly misadjusted. The high and low voltages for the CDAC and CDPot are arbitrary and, therefore, can be centered wherever the circuit calibration is required.
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can be mounted on the circuit board directly in the signal path, exactly where they are needed. In contrast, mechanical pots can require human access, possibly necessitating long circuit traces or coaxial cables. In sensitive circuits, the capacitance, time delay, or interference pickup of these cables can reduce equipment performance. Digital pots also maintain their calibration values better over time, whereas mechanical pots can continue to experience small movements even after they are sealed. For example, a wiper will move as the wiper spring relaxes when the pot is temperature cycled, or when the pot is subjected to shipping vibration. Calibration values stored in digital pots are not affected by these factors. Additionally, a one-time programmable (OTP) CDPot can be used for extra safety. It permanently locks in the calibration setting, preventing an operator from making further adjustments (Figure 3). To change the calibration value, one must physically replace the OTP CDPot. A special variant of the OTP CDPot always returns to its stored value upon power-on reset, while allowing operators to make limited adjustments during operation at their discretion.
Figure 3. An adjustable filter with gain allows the calibration setting to be frozen via OTP.
For example, coupling a DAC with a trimmable CRef such as the MAX6350 allows the overall system gain to be fine-tuned by simply adjusting the CRef voltage.
Figure 4. Digital pot trims reference voltage to change system gain via DAC. The second type is an adjustable reference (such as the MAX6037 or MAX6160) that allows adjustment over a wide range (e.g., 1V to 12V). This is advantageous for field devices that have wide-tolerance sensors and that must operate on unstable power. Portable maintenance devices might need to operate from batteries, automotive power, or emergency power generators. The third type is an E2CRef (Figure 5), which integrates memory, allowing a single-pin command to copy any voltage between 0.3V and [V IN - 0.3V], and then to infinitely hold that level.
Figure 5. The DS4303 infinite sample-and-hold adjustable voltage reference block diagram. E2CRefs benefit test and monitoring instruments that need to establish a baseline or warning-alert threshold.
Conclusion
When is calibration important? Only when we require accuracy, quality, and perfection. We need products for everyday use that are high-quality, affordable, and solidly reliable. Calibration helps us reduce component tolerance buildup in the system, while maintaining affordability. For more calibration information, products, application notes, and design tools, please visit www.maximintegrated.com/cal.
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References
1. Youden, Dr. W.J. "Experimentation and Measurement." Applied Mathematics Division, National Bureau of Standards in 1961 Reprinted May 1997, U.S. Department of Commerce, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Special Publication 672.
Related Parts DS1804 DS1859 DS4303 MAX5312 MAX5422 MAX5481 MAX5527 MAX5528 MAX5529 MAX6037 MAX6160 MAX6325 MAX6350 Nonvolatile Trimmer Potentiometer Dual, Temperature-Controlled Resistors with Internally Calibrated Monitors Electronically Programmable Voltage Reference 10V, 12-Bit, Serial, Voltage-Output DAC 256-Tap, Nonvolatile, SPI-Interface, Digital Potentiometers 10-Bit, Nonvolatile, Linear-Taper Digital Potentiometers 64-Tap, One-Time Programmable, Linear-Taper Digital Potentiometers 64-Tap, One-Time Programmable, Linear-Taper Digital Potentiometers 64-Tap, One-Time Programmable, Linear-Taper Digital Potentiometers Low-Power, Fixed and Adjustable Reference with Shutdown in SOT23 SOT23, Low-Cost, Low-Dropout, 3-Terminal Voltage References 1ppm/C, Low-Noise, +2.5V/+4.096V/+5V Voltage References 1ppm/C, Low-Noise, +2.5V/+4.096V/+5V Voltage References Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples Free Samples
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